P_Rog Posted December 10, 2007 Posted December 10, 2007 Hi all, I'm looking for some input on an experimental setup. I need to create a hot zone of about 800 centigrade and move a 2x2 inch bronze base through the hot zone. Ideally, the bronze base needs to be in a ambient temperature zone, then as soon as it hits the hot zone it heats up to the 800 or so centigrade. I initially thought of using a beam of light with a lens. I was thinking about using a 1000W halogen spotlight (8 inch diameter) and then use a lens to focus the light (the hot zone can be pretty small). Does anyone know any relationships of energy (temp) with respect to focal distance and diameter of lens? I was hoping to find a lens that would work for me based on that. Or any other suggestions for creating a hot zone? Thanks.
BhavinB Posted December 10, 2007 Posted December 10, 2007 You will lose quite a bit of that 1000W because it won't be within the numerical aperture of the lens. It's easier to do this experiment using a mode-locked high-power laser but that depends on your budget.
insane_alien Posted December 10, 2007 Posted December 10, 2007 big concave mirror+sun will do the trick. might take more than a thousand watts.
John Cuthber Posted December 10, 2007 Posted December 10, 2007 Why mode lock the laser? Anyway, if someone can be bothered to do the arithmetic on the stefan radiation law http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stefan-Boltzmann_law then they can see if a 2 inch square at 800C radiates more than 1KW (I suspect it might). If it does then you have no chance with just 1KW.
swansont Posted December 10, 2007 Posted December 10, 2007 Anyway, if someone can be bothered to do the arithmetic on the stefan radiation law http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stefan-Boltzmann_law then they can see if a 2 inch square at 800C radiates more than 1KW (I suspect it might). If it does then you have no chance with just 1KW. It is - it's over 8 kW. But that means you can't heat the whole thing up to that temperature, not that you can't get a spot to that temperature. edit: this is incorrect - see below
P_Rog Posted December 11, 2007 Author Posted December 11, 2007 Thanks for all the input so far...I'm still getting through my heat transfer class... It's for a heat treatment process, so I can't run a current through it. The heat treat has to be done in an inert environment, so the sample is enclosed with a He gas environment, which is why I was looking at the focused light. A laser is not in the budget. What about an RF induction setup or something similar?
swansont Posted December 11, 2007 Posted December 11, 2007 I just re-checked the calculation (8kW seemed rather high) and I apparently had a slip of a digit somewhere. I now get ~375 Watts for the radiated power, which seems much more reasonable. (Assuming emissivity of 1). This also ignores and conduction and convection.
MrMongoose Posted December 11, 2007 Posted December 11, 2007 would using three lamps and three lenses be above budget?
John Cuthber Posted December 12, 2007 Posted December 12, 2007 RF heating seems a much better idea to me than light. Also, He is quite a good conductor, could you just heat the container and let the He carry the heat to whatever?
BhavinB Posted December 13, 2007 Posted December 13, 2007 I'm not exactly sure how this setup can use a relatively cheap and available lens and huge spotlight which loses alot of its output because all of it can't be focused (its bigger than the lens and divergence is higher than the NA of the lens).
P_Rog Posted December 13, 2007 Author Posted December 13, 2007 I'm not exactly sure how this setup can use a relatively cheap and available lens and huge spotlight which loses alot of its output because all of it can't be focused (its bigger than the lens and divergence is higher than the NA of the lens). There are some larger lenses out there, but of course there is a payoff with focal distance. Looks like this idea is out, probably go with a resistance or RF furnace set up of some sort.
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